SEXUAL STEWARDSHIP
><> Paul & Lori <><
The Marriage Bed

     We spent many years trying to understand our responsibilities and "rights" regarding sex; eventually we came up with an idea we call sexual stewardship.  This idea grew out of our attempts to understand 1 Cor. 7:3-5. "Let the husband fulfill [Lit., render] his duty to his wife, and likewise also the wife to her husband.  The wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband does; and likewise also the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife does.  Stop depriving one another, except by agreement for a time that you may devote yourselves to prayer, and come together again lest Satan tempt you because of your lack of self-control."

     We used to joke with each other ... Paul would point to Lori and say, "That's my body, and it wants sex!" then she would point to him and say, "But my body does not want to have sex."  Obviously the seemingly literal translation of having power over our spouse's body creates this kind of a paradox, so there must be some other meaning.

A quick detour into Greek is needed here:      
     The word "duty" in verse 3 is actually two Greek words which might better be translated as "the good or kindness which is owed."   It is very clear that sex is something our spouses are supposed to receive from us; it's their due, and our duty.    
     The Greek word translated as "authority" in verse 4 means "to have power or authority" or "to be master of any one, exercise authority over one."  It's the same word used in 1 Cor. 6:12 which says all things are lawful, but I will not be under the power of anything.      
     The Greek word translated as "depriving" in verse 5 actually means to defraud, rob, or despoil.  It's stealing from someone that which belongs to them.

     It's interesting that there's a symmetry here; she owes him the same thing he owes her.  This symmetry isn't found in other areas of the marriage, so God obviously felt it important to tell men they owed their wives sex.  This is where we see the idea of stewardship.  A steward is put in charge of something which does not belong to him.  The steward is given both authority and responsibility for the thing (or person) he's made a steward of, and he's accountable to the one who made him steward.  In the case of sex, God has given the husband stewardship of the wife's sexuality, and the wife stewardship of the husband's sexuality.  A steward never puts his own desires above the care of what has been entrusted to him, and we must do the same with sex, putting the good of our spouse above our own sexual desires.  

     But what exactly is required; what do we have to do?  Since God made us stewards, it is God who sets the requirements.  We are not required to give our spouse what he or she wants sexually, we are required to give them what is right in God's eyes.  Certainly their desires are important, and they need (i.e. are required) to let us know what they want, what feels good, etc., but this is not the final word on the issue.  If a spouse's desires are not in line with God's, then we must choose God's desires over theirs.  If a woman says she had no need for sex, the husband should know this is not right with God, and he would be required by God to do everything possible to bring her to a point where she could receive sexually from him.  On the other hand, if a husband said "I need sex 6 times a day" the wife would know this was out of line with what God wants, and she would be required by God to give him less than he "desires."  What if he says "I 'need' to experience sex with 2 women", or she "needs" to send photos of her having sex with him to her friends?  If it's not right with God, we must refuse!

Paul:      
     Maybe a few examples of how this plays out will help.  There have been times when Lori suggested we should not have sex because she felt (knew) I needed to deal with something, and she believed (correctly) that if we had sex I would use it to hide from the thing I needed to deal with.  Then there have been times when I was so exhausted from work that I was unaware of my body, much less its needs.  Lori, however, knows that I have a hard time falling asleep when I get like that, and she also knows that doing something for me sexually will greatly help me get to sleep (we know a man who has learned to treat his wife's occasional insomnia in a similar way).  On the other side, there are times I know Lori needs sex but is too busy-minded to be aware of that fact.  I also know that taking care of that for her does her a world of good in many ways, and it's very much the right and loving thing to do.

     My thinking changed when I realized that God had given me Lori's body so that I could bless her, not so I could get my needs met.  What's more, it goes beyond the bedroom ... if my actions, or lack of actions, in some other area interfere with the intimacy that's necessary for me to truly please her sexually, then those actions, or lack of actions, result in me defrauding her of sex!  As I looked at blessing her instead of "getting mine," I began to see her sexuality as something I was supposed to care for, to nurture, and cause to grow.  It's a potential that can only be fulfilled if I put time and energy into not only sex, but all areas of our relationship.  

Lori:
     Sexual stewardship took the fear of being abused out of our sexuality for me.  It's really easy for someone who has been abused (childhood sexual abuse, rape and an abusive first marriage) to feel overwhelmed and run over by your spouse's sexuality.  You wonder if you will every be able to adequately and safely take care of  their sexual needs and you are always looking for manipulation and wrong desires.

     With sexual stewardship in mind, I could go to (a safe and consistent) God and talk to Him about what He said about my husband's sexual needs and wants.

     I spent time reading and talking to Paul about what a normal male sexual drive is about.  Then I spent time praying about Paul and what he specifically needed (physically and emotionally) to feel sexually and relationally fulfilled.  Now, of course in the beginning, I wasn't really in a place to do everything right, but I at least gained a direction and some attainable goals.  Over time, and with some emotional healing, I've come to really appreciate that I am a steward over his sexual needs and wants.  Conversely, I have also learned to trust him with my own needs and wants ... and, surprise! ... it works.  :)


Scripture taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE ®,
Copyright ( 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation.  Used by permission.



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